Jacquard's Web

How a Hand-Loom Led to the Birth of the Information Age

James Essinger

Jacquard's Web

How a Hand-Loom Led to the Birth of the Information Age

James Essinger

Description

Circuits from silk? Today's technophiles probably have no idea how much today's computer technology owes to the invention of one ingenuous textile manufacturer in nineteenth-century France. Here, master storyteller James Essinger shows through a series of remarkable and meticulously researched historical connections how the Jacquard loom kick-started a process of scientific evolution which would lead directly to the development of the modern computer. Jacquard's 1804 invention, a loom which used punch cards with stored instructions for weaving different patterns and designs, enabled the master silk-weavers of Lyons to weave fabrics 25 times faster than the competition. Here, Essinger reveals the plethora of extraordinary links between that innovation in weaving and today's computer age, introducing us to the intriguing and colorful people who paved the way. The book concludes by bringing the story completely up-to-date with the latest developments in the World Wide Web and the fascinating phenomenon of artificial intelligence. Attractively illustrated and compellingly narrated, Jacquard's Web presents an eye-opening and scarcely known history that will prove fascinating to readers of popular science, especially those interested in the history of science, technology, and computing, as well as professional scientists, historians, and students.

Jacquard's Web

How a Hand-Loom Led to the Birth of the Information Age

James Essinger

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements1. The engraving that wasn't2. A better mouse-trap3. The son of a master weaver4. The emperor's new clothes5. From weaving to computing6. The difference engine7. The analytical engine8. A question of faith and funding9. The lady who loved the Jacquard loom10. A crisis with the American census11. The first Jacquard looms that wove information12. The birth of IBM13. The Thomas Watson phenomenon14. Howard Aiken dreams of a computer15. IBM and the Harvard Mark 116. Weaving at the speed of light17. The futureIndex

Jacquard's Web

How a Hand-Loom Led to the Birth of the Information Age

James Essinger

Author Information

James Essinger is a writer with a particular interest in the history of ideas that have had a practical impact on the modern world. He is currently working on a novel about Charles Babbage and Ada Lovelace and on a popular history of the written word.

Jacquard's Web

How a Hand-Loom Led to the Birth of the Information Age

James Essinger

Reviews and Awards

Named one of The Economist's Best Science and Technology Books of 2004 One of the best books in Science and Technology for 2004--Entertainment Weekly

"With wit and imagination, Essinger has woven a marvelous tapestry celebrating this rugs-to-riches story and the unlikely birth of the information age."--Entertainment Weekly

"Jacquard's Web is more than the biography of a man and his machine. Mr. Essinger moves from the Industrial Age to the Information Age, connecting the loom, step by step, to the Harvard Mark I, the first proper computer, presented to the public in 1944.... Essinger tells his story with passion and with a gracious willingness to help the lay reader grasp the intricacies of technology."--Wall Street Journal

"Essinger does more than weave together science, history, and business: he sheds light on the nature of innovation.... His book deftly shows how even the most surprising breakthroughs are based on the work of others, and need a host of enabling factors to take root. Without the appropriate financial, technological, and cultural factors, no inventor, regardless of passion, can harvest his brilliant machine.... His tale of cultural, economic, and personal factors that enable ideas to become real tools makes this book a welcome addition to the literature of innovation."-- Tom Ehrenfeld, The Boston Globe

"An original perspective...the thread that runs through it--the relation of everything that has come since to the principle of the Jacquard loom--quite compelling."--Walter Gratzer, King's College London